Data from: A comparative analysis of the behavioral response to fishing boats in two albatross species

Anthropogenic food resources have significantly modified the foraging behavior of many animal species. They enhance large multi-specific aggregations of individuals, with strong ecological consequences. It is challenging to predict how individuals or species can differ in their reaction to these res...

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Main Authors: Collet, Julien, Patrick, Samantha C., Weimerskirch, Henri
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: University of Liverpool 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://datacat.liverpool.ac.uk/1944/
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spelling ftuliverpoolrdc:oai:datacat.liverpool.ac.uk:1944 2023-05-15T13:59:07+02:00 Data from: A comparative analysis of the behavioral response to fishing boats in two albatross species Collet, Julien Patrick, Samantha C. Weimerskirch, Henri 2017-06-27 https://datacat.liverpool.ac.uk/1944/ English eng University of Liverpool Collet, Julien, Patrick, Samantha C. and Weimerskirch, Henri (2017) Data from: A comparative analysis of the behavioral response to fishing boats in two albatross species. [Data Collection] Data Collection NonPeerReviewed 2017 ftuliverpoolrdc 2022-11-24T23:26:25Z Anthropogenic food resources have significantly modified the foraging behavior of many animal species. They enhance large multi-specific aggregations of individuals, with strong ecological consequences. It is challenging to predict how individuals or species can differ in their reaction to these resources. For instance, there are wide variations in seabird species abundance behind fishing boats, and individual variations in interaction rates. Whether this is reflecting variations in fine-scale encounter rates or rather variations in attraction strength is poorly quantified. Here we compare the response of Wandering (WA) and Black-browed (BBA) albatrosses to fishing boats operating in sub-Antarctic waters. We use GPS tracking data from both birds and boats (Vessel Monitoring System). Attraction distances were similar between the 2 species (up to 30 km). BBA foraged further from fishing grounds and encountered boats less frequently than WA, but once they encountered a boat BBA were more strongly attracted (80% vs. 60% chance) and had a higher level of active interaction, compared to WA. Furthermore, in the absence of boats, BBA were rarely observed foraging over the habitat where the fisheries mainly operate, in contrast with WA. We thus report qualitative and quantitative differences in the response of these 2 species to the same fishing fleet. WA, the larger, more dominant and more generalist species was unexpectedly less attracted to fishing vessels. Comparing our results with previously published studies, we suggest that energetic requirements of individuals may be a crucial predictor for assessing risks of interactions with anthropogenic food resources. Text Antarc* Antarctic DataCat: The Research Data Catalogue (University of Liverpool) Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection DataCat: The Research Data Catalogue (University of Liverpool)
op_collection_id ftuliverpoolrdc
language English
description Anthropogenic food resources have significantly modified the foraging behavior of many animal species. They enhance large multi-specific aggregations of individuals, with strong ecological consequences. It is challenging to predict how individuals or species can differ in their reaction to these resources. For instance, there are wide variations in seabird species abundance behind fishing boats, and individual variations in interaction rates. Whether this is reflecting variations in fine-scale encounter rates or rather variations in attraction strength is poorly quantified. Here we compare the response of Wandering (WA) and Black-browed (BBA) albatrosses to fishing boats operating in sub-Antarctic waters. We use GPS tracking data from both birds and boats (Vessel Monitoring System). Attraction distances were similar between the 2 species (up to 30 km). BBA foraged further from fishing grounds and encountered boats less frequently than WA, but once they encountered a boat BBA were more strongly attracted (80% vs. 60% chance) and had a higher level of active interaction, compared to WA. Furthermore, in the absence of boats, BBA were rarely observed foraging over the habitat where the fisheries mainly operate, in contrast with WA. We thus report qualitative and quantitative differences in the response of these 2 species to the same fishing fleet. WA, the larger, more dominant and more generalist species was unexpectedly less attracted to fishing vessels. Comparing our results with previously published studies, we suggest that energetic requirements of individuals may be a crucial predictor for assessing risks of interactions with anthropogenic food resources.
format Text
author Collet, Julien
Patrick, Samantha C.
Weimerskirch, Henri
spellingShingle Collet, Julien
Patrick, Samantha C.
Weimerskirch, Henri
Data from: A comparative analysis of the behavioral response to fishing boats in two albatross species
author_facet Collet, Julien
Patrick, Samantha C.
Weimerskirch, Henri
author_sort Collet, Julien
title Data from: A comparative analysis of the behavioral response to fishing boats in two albatross species
title_short Data from: A comparative analysis of the behavioral response to fishing boats in two albatross species
title_full Data from: A comparative analysis of the behavioral response to fishing boats in two albatross species
title_fullStr Data from: A comparative analysis of the behavioral response to fishing boats in two albatross species
title_full_unstemmed Data from: A comparative analysis of the behavioral response to fishing boats in two albatross species
title_sort data from: a comparative analysis of the behavioral response to fishing boats in two albatross species
publisher University of Liverpool
publishDate 2017
url https://datacat.liverpool.ac.uk/1944/
geographic Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_relation Collet, Julien, Patrick, Samantha C. and Weimerskirch, Henri (2017) Data from: A comparative analysis of the behavioral response to fishing boats in two albatross species. [Data Collection]
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